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HomeNewsPakistan hits back over bin Laden furore

Pakistan hits back over bin Laden furore

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PAKISTAN’S president dismissed as “baseless” accusations that his nation extends safe haven to extremists and insisted its long-term help was crucial to the US success in gunning down Osama bin Laden.

Asif Ali Zardari’s defence came after Washington warned it would probe how the Al-Qaeda kingpin managed to live in undetected luxury in Pakistan, as gripping new details emerged about the US commando raid that killed him.

Officials said DNA tests had proven conclusively that the man shot dead by US special forces in Abbottabad was indeed the Islamist terror mastermind who boasted about the deaths of 3,000 people in the September 11 attacks of 2001.

Bin Laden’s death at the hands of helicopter-borne US Navy SEAL commandos was the climax of years of painstaking intelligence work that followed him from the mountains of Afghanistan to a palatial villa in a Pakistani garrison town.

Obama’s top anti-terror adviser John Brennan said it was “inconceivable” that bin Laden did not enjoy a support network in Pakistan, a nuclear-armed nation allied uneasily to the US-led war in neighbouring Afghanistan.

After Sunday (May 1) night’s public celebrations in New York and Washington, the mood among some US lawmakers turned angry amid demands to know how bin Laden lived unmolested in a country that receives billions of dollars of US aid.

Leafy Abbottabad is home to the Pakistani equivalent of the West Point and Sandhurst military academies, is popular with retired military personnel and tourists alike, and lies just two hours’ drive north of Islamabad.

But in an opinion piece written for today’s Washington Post, the Pakistani president said the criticism was groundless.

“Some in the US press have suggested that Pakistan lacked vitality in its pursuit of terrorism, or worse yet that we were disingenuous and actually protected the terrorists we claimed to be pursuing,” Zardari said.

“Such baseless speculation may make exciting cable news, but it doesn’t reflect fact.”

Zardari acknowledged that the US commandos carried out the Abbottabad raid without Pakistani collaboration – but stressed that Islamabad had initially helped to identify the Al-Qaeda courier who led them to bin Laden.

Overall, he wrote, “a decade of cooperation and partnership between the United States and Pakistan led up to the elimination of Osama bin Laden as a continuing threat to the civilised world”.

Zardari made no direct comment on alleged intelligence failures, and in an interview with a reporter, Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani sidestepped questions over how bin Laden had gone undetected.

Referring to the late terrorism mastermind as “that gentleman”, Gilani said only that the villa housing bin Laden was in a “remote area” out of reach of the army’s main city bases.

But leaders in both Afghanistan and India have said bin Laden’s discovery so close to Islamabad vindicated their claims of double-dealing by Pakistan’s military and intelligence powerbrokers.

And French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe – who was due to meet Gilani in Paris later today – said the fact that bin Laden went completely unnoticed showed that Pakistan’s position on the late Al-Qaeda leader “lacks clarity”.

The commando operation, which US officials said lasted less than 40 minutes, stormed a heavily fortified $1m (£606,000) compound that stood out from other properties for its towering perimeter walls and heavy security.

But in a country where anti-US feeling runs strong and where conspiracy theories proliferate, not everyone was buying the US version of events.

“Nobody believes it. We’ve never seen any Arabs around here,” said Bashir Qureshi, 61, who lives a stone’s throw from where bin Laden was shot and whose windows were blown out in the raid.

“They (the US) said they had thrown his body to the sea! This is wrong, he was not here.”

US officials said bin Laden was buried at sea after Islamic rites on the USS Carl Vinson aircraft carrier, as many world leaders welcomed his demise but warned it did not mean the challenge from terror was over.

Mohammed Asif, who bakes naan bread in his Abbottabad shop, said a male resident of the bin Laden compound would buy his bread for the household every day, and believed his naan formed part of the Al-Qaeda chief’s last meal.

“I’m proud of it, because he was a hero who challenged America,” Asif said.

“I will tell my grandchildren that it was not our army that launched an offensive against him, it was the Americans.”

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